2008-10-16 68 17

Guinness found out about Geohashing yesterday and was trying to get someone to go to a new graticule;
the point I chose was in the foreign country of Norway :-) 170km from Kiruna.

Around 2pm, right after work, we jumped in the car and were leaving our snowy town on our tour towards
Norway, passing the country border without problems! We reached the Atlantic ocean after about 150km
and the temperature was about +5 C but windy. We drove on for a while looking for a parking spot close
to the hashpoint. We conveniently found one with only 900m to the hashpoint BUT it had 240m of
elevation difference!

We crossed the road and went into the forest below the mountain to make our way through. At the foot of
the mountain we found a fenced-in door that probably led inside the hill. On the right hand side of
the fence we saw something that reminded us of a trail, or at least it was a climbable part of the
hill. As we made our way higher and higher we realized the terrain was terrible, up up up, with only
small trees tortured by the wind. After a little while the terrain went from moderate incline to high
and steep, we had to make alternative routes more than once.

When we finally reached the top where we initially had thought the hashpoint would be, we checked
the GPS only to find out that it was further up on the mountain! We had only gone about 150 meters
from the car, and 50 meters up. So the GPS said, even though we felt like it had been a lot longer

Looking up we saw another peak further away and headed that way, after another half hour of going back
and forth, trying to find a safe path on the wet and moss-covered stones. We reached the top of this
mountain, checked the GPS and the hashpoint was still farther away; but ahead of us was a ravine that
wasn't on the maps we had. We had a short discussion about what to do and decided to walk around it to
the right and up to the peak on the other side. Halfway up that hill we noticed that the GPS pointed
to the peak behind it...

After a long time we reached the hashpoint and there was a very beautiful view over the ocean and the
City of Bjerkvik from that mountain, BUT it was so windy that we had trouble standing up, and the sun
was setting so it was going to get dark soon.

We hurriedly took some pictures of the GPS and us, and duct-taped a sign to a boulder that was located
about 2 meters from the hashpoint.

All the trouble, steep inclines and particuarly the ravine we had faced going up made us look for an
alternative path down. We walked more to the north hoping to find a safer way down.
There was some trouble finding a safe path in the darkness since a flashlight only lights up small
parts of your surroundings.

After a little while we found the stream that came from the ravine and we crossed it to follow it on
some sort of path on the other side. It didn't take long until we were in the middle of a forest with
small streams and rivulets crossing our zig-zagging path all the time. Guinness got his feet wet on
more then one occasion.

But anyway, we finally emerged from the woods and came down to a road (looking at Google maps afterwards tells us it must have been Småbergan Rd) and were walking south-southwest along it to our car when we saw some strange signs in
the dark.. turning the flashlight upon one of them revealed the message "Fare Skytefelt": Danger,
Firing Range!! And it was pointing into the forest we had come from!
We had been on a military area that we did not know about! (Hey, we were in a foreign country.)
Another sign warned about live ammunition and duds lying about; when we read the signs we remembered that when we left the car for our expedition we heard some automatic gunfire.

By pure dumb luck we had survived and were a bit amazed that there had been no signs at the point we started to climb, perhaps no-one expected anyone to be foolish enough to try scaling the mountain from that direction.

Now we only had 170km of road ahead of us to get home.
One funny thing on the way home was a Norwegian man who had got low on oil in his VW-transporter and
luckily we had one spare bottle of oil that he bought from us, so we got cash for caching :-)

We got home just after 9pm with the snow falling over Kiruna, tired but an experience richer.